THE INFLUENCE OF THYROIDECTOMY, GONADECTOMY, SUPRARENALECTOMY, AND SPLENECTOMY ON THE THYMUS GLAND OF RABBITS
Open Access
- 1 October 1924
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 40 (4) , 429-443
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.40.4.429
Abstract
Thyroidectomy hastens, while gonadectomy delays, but does not permanently prevent, involution of the thymus. Suprarenalectomy alone not only delays involution of the thymus and lymphoid tissue but may cause their regeneration. Thyroidectomy prevents this reaction even after combined suprarenalectomy and gonadectomy. Suprarenalectomy plus gonadectomy is a more powerful stimulus for thymus and lymphoid regeneration than either of these influences alone. The combined effect of these two factors results in certain lymphoid and thymus hyperplasia in rabbits which persists until regeneration of accessory interrenal tissue corrects the physiological defect. The syndrome thus experimentally produced resembles status lymphaticus and is believed to depend mainly on a partial loss of certain functions of the interrenal and sex glands rather than of the chromaffin tissue. The normal and abnormal lymphoid and thymic hyperplasias of infancy and childhood are believed to be manifestations of a functional underdevelopment of the interrenal and sex glands of varying intensity. The so called lymphatic constitution which underlies or accompanies exophthalmic goiter, Addison's disease, and acromegaly also appears to be dependent on a partial suppression of certain functions of the interrenal and sex glands.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE INFLUENCE OF THE SUPRARENAL GLAND ON THE THYMUSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1924
- A Study of the Involutional changes which occur in the Adrenal Cortex during Infancy.1916
- The thymus and sexual organsThe Journal of Physiology, 1911
- The post-natal changes in the thymus of guinea-pigs, and the effect of castration on thymus structureThe Journal of Physiology, 1905
- On the relationship of the thymus to the sexual organs1The Journal of Physiology, 1904